Macbook Pro 16 Inch

Nix4Life
Valued Contributor

so far appears to be firmware locked to Catalina

25 REPLIES 25

donmontalvo
Esteemed Contributor III

mhasman
Valued Contributor

Any chance to install Mojave?

hedenstam
New Contributor III

So, what happens if you try to install Mojave from a USB-Stick?

m_entholzner
Contributor III
Contributor III

@mhasman no.
@hedenstam same as always. This won't work. Deal with Catalina or leave out the new 16inch ;)

allanp81
Valued Contributor

It's 1 of the many reasons I will never buy an Apple device!

Nix4Life
Valued Contributor

Just seemed kind of quick..

philburk
New Contributor III

It's been more than two months since Catalina was publicly released. This happens EVERY YEAR with new OS releases and hardware. If anyone is surprised by this then they have not been paying adequate attention. PLAN AHEAD. Order stock in advance if you anticipate not being able to support the next release of macOS.

I continue to be amazed by the fact that IT admins don't manage their deployments and inventory. This is all within your power to accommodate.

stevewood
Honored Contributor II
Honored Contributor II

This has been the modus operandi of Apple forever. Anytime new hardware is released after a new operating system, that new hardware can only run that current operating system and newer. Just do a search on Jamf Nation for any of Daper @donmontalvo 's posts with "forked by Apple" in them. You'll see that we have this same discussion every year.

mm2270
Legendary Contributor III

Late to the discussion here, but I echo what's being said above. This is SOP for Apple for a long while now. It doesn't always happen with small speed bumps to the same model, but whenever they introduce a more significant hardware revision or an entirely new model, like in this case, they ALWAYS tie it to the latest OS release and it cannot be downgraded.
In all seriousness, no-one should be surprised by this at this point. In fact, I would have been very surprised if the 16" MBP could have been downgraded to Mojave.

shreyamathur651
New Contributor II

It is normal buddy!

ammonsc
Contributor II

@philburk I agree, order stock ahead and then test and prepare.

donmontalvo
Esteemed Contributor III

macOS is definitely a platform that you've got to have your track shoes on to manage.

--
https://donmontalvo.com

kerouak
Valued Contributor

allanp81
Many thanks for your input..
BTW, what are you doin here?

mhasman
Valued Contributor

Anybody having issue to enroll new 16inch with DEP?

sdagley
Esteemed Contributor II

@mhasman No issues here with Jamf Pro 10.17.0. What are you running into?

mhasman
Valued Contributor

10.13. Planning the update

sdagley
Esteemed Contributor II

That may be your problem. I believe Jamf Pro 10.15.0 was the first release officially Catalina compatible. If you do SSL inspection on your network be aware there are additional servers that require whitelisting when moving from Mojave to Catalina for initiating DEP enrollment. (humb.apple.com being one we hadn't previously needed whitelisted) .

mhasman
Valued Contributor

@sdagley thank you!

micah002
New Contributor

A comment I saw above stated that because new hardware can't have the software downgraded they will never buy an Apple product. Ultimately, that's your choice, but the truth is that Apple does this for a myriad of reasons. They tune their hardware to work most effectively with the most recent release of the software. They would have to do a ton more work to do to also prep Mojave for whole new piece of hardware with new a chip layout.

While Windows tends to not care and allow you install it on just about any piece of hardware, that's not true of the companies that make hardware drivers for their hardware. Windows doesn't build their own drivers for hardware because there are so many iterations of Trackpads, Mice, Keyboards, Wireless Cards, SSDs and HDs, RAM, and everything else that they let the hardware manufacturers build their own software drivers. And when new hardware is released from those companies, they don't generally support backwards compatibility to earlier versions of Windows.

If you don't like it, don't buy it (which was stated quite clearly)- but don't pretend that other companies aren't doing the same thing.

It is this kind of attention to their hardware and software that brings me back to Apple over and over. There might be machines out there specced the same or better with the same build quality as Apple, but it won't have the same level of software parity or quality (not to say that Apple is perfect, it's not - it's just better).

allanp81
Valued Contributor

@micah002 Not to get into an argument or anything... but working where I do where we work with both PCs and Macs, Macs give us far more headaches due to Apple's "policies" than our PCs could ever do. They really are a terrible company and I wish we could just get rid of them!

sdagley
Esteemed Contributor II

@allanp81 As a counterpoint, I am soooo glad that when I'm installing macOS on a Mac I don't have to worry about bundling the correct drivers to install because the components were likely to differ from machine to machine, even ones purchased in the same order. Needing the macOS version that shipped on the machine, or newer, is a much simpler requirement, and one I'll pick any day.

wildfrog
Contributor II

I thought @milesleacy covered this pretty well a couple of years ago at JNUC - What It Says On The Tin (JNUC 2017)

Scotty
Contributor

For whats its worth, as others have stated it has always been this way, deal with it., thats no reason to not buy Apple lol. Also, I find is a lot easier to deal with the new OS on Apple forced on us than all the various old versions of Windows that seem to stick around forever. I'll take the Apple way 8 days a week.

allanp81
Valued Contributor

@sdagley Can't say that in 20 years of supporting Windows devices that we've ever had that particular problem!

philburk
New Contributor III

That's because Macs are not Windows devices and do not have to have the level of 3rd party driver support that Windows devices do. It's a fundamental design choice.